I like the concept but the curation would have to be done ruthlessly by experts, otherwise you'll get the same SEO optimized garbage we find on google.
To see Machine Learning Mastery at the top doesn't inspire confidence in your curation process. It's a blog that's emblematic to me of low quality content pumped out for SEO purposes.
Love the concept.<p>One slight improvement that would push me to actually bookmark a site like this is if, rather than merely listing _entire blogs_, it listed a feed of the most recent _posts_ from the various blogs.<p>Posts are the level of abstraction that directly aligns with our reading habits. (Similar story for podcasts: give me an episode feed, not a podcast feed.) Twitter and other social media giants have cracked this code well.
Let's appreciate that this project try to give visibility to personal self-hosted blogs (not mediums, linkedins, substacks, dev.tos) and is using (I guess) good old RSS tech to get the articles.<p>Cheers! * opens google.com/reader and plays the 2005 Gorillaz hit song Feel Good Inc before going to the cinema to see V for Vendetta *
This is great! If you're looking for other similar sites, I'd also suggest taking a look at <a href="https://engineeringblogs.xyz/" rel="nofollow">https://engineeringblogs.xyz/</a> too.<p>While the BFD trends site is focused on personal developer blogs & trending posts, that one includes high-quality engineering team blogs too, like Cloudflare and Google Research. It's a bit simpler, and focuses simply on the latest posts rather than trending content, but it's worth a look.
I love this! Sometimes it's hard to find articles by individuals about dev topics, especially more niche topics, because it's hard for them to rise above Stack Overflow, Medium, etc. in search results. But I find that individual/independent blogs are often far higher quality and do a better job explaining concepts.
I liked the idea, but I'm expecting the home page to be more like "<a href="https://bloggingfordevs.com/trends/" rel="nofollow">https://bloggingfordevs.com/trends/</a>" with a link or banner link or something to the stuff it's at home today; at least having the links to trends at first instead of need to moving to the bottom to see them. I'm afraid some colleagues didn't found out and just kept on the first page.<p>You directly go to dark mode ;) it's more popular I known; I like to suggest a light mode; maybe you can read it from the system like StackOverflow.
These days, my experience to use Google search for finding good sources for some high level technical question is very bad in general that can be summarised as going through piles of corporate blog posts with shallow content promoting their products.<p>I would be happy to use human curated collections of links by topics.
Thank you so much for sharing this useful and informative information with us.<p>Cybonetic Technologies is a leading web hosting company in Patna offering Fast and Reliable Web Hosting. Buy a domain and hosting at the cheap prices with 24x7 support.
<a href="<a href="https://www.cybonetic.com/web-hosting">web" rel="nofollow">https://www.cybonetic.com/web-hosting">web</a> hosting company in patna</a>
Thank you so much for sharing this useful and informative information with us.<p>Cybonetic Technologies is a leading web hosting company in Patna offering Fast and Reliable Web Hosting. Buy a domain and hosting at the cheap prices with 24x7 support.
<a href="<a href="https://www.cybonetic.com/web-hosting" rel="nofollow">https://www.cybonetic.com/web-hosting</a>">
Nice. I've been so burnt out seeing the same type of content for certain topics I follow. This looks like a promising tool for finding fresh new info.
I inherited some old Rails code and am updating sites recently. It turns out whoever wrote the code I'm working on was using blog-driven development. Getting a kick out of finding many old blog posts where the code originated from. Google->Ctrl+C->Ctrl-V->Repeat
Can you please create a separate section for System programming(C, C++, Operating systems, compilers...).
I would like to submit few blog entries from my collection.
I've found immediately useful information and look forward to digging deeper into the content. Thank you so much for this. Your site is exactly what's been missing for me for so long.
I love the idea of adding some way to have crowd bias and not all mlent alone curating. Not that I think you’ll be corrupt, but more that popular opinion is _often_ good.